, Scotland. The world's tallest cinema , near
Seaham, England , England , England Cineworld was founded by Steve Wiener in 1995. The first Cineworld cinema opened in
Stevenage, Hertfordshire in July 1996. A second cinema opened in
Wakefield, West Yorkshire, in December 1996 and the third opened in
Feltham, London in July 1997. In 2004, Cineworld was acquired by Blackstone private equity group for £120m. In December 2012, Cineworld acquired the
Picturehouse Cinema chain, adding 21 cinemas to its portfolio, including The Little Theatre in Bath, Brighton's
Duke of York's cinema,
the Cameo, Edinburgh, the
Phoenix in Oxford and the
Ritzy Cinema in Brixton.
The Blackstone Group, which had invested in Cineworld when it was privately owned, sold its entire remaining 20% shareholding in November 2010. In August 2013, The Guardian revealed that Cineworld employs 80% of its 4,300 staff on
zero hour contracts. In October 2013, the Chester location was closed due to the landowner wanting to develop the land into a supermarket. In 2014, Cineworld's Picturehouse chain was subject to
industrial action owing to its refusal to pay the
London living wage to its staff. The workforce attracted the support of
Eric Cantona. On 27 February 2014, Cineworld completed the takeover of
Cinema City International N.V. As of March 2015, the Greidinger family (who owned a controlling 54% stake in Cinema City International) held a controlling bloc as the largest shareholder in the enlarged company. In May 2014,
Mooky Greidinger joined the board of directors as CEO, having previously been CEO of
Cinema City International. In 2015, Picturehouse unveiled their new West End flagship site, ‘Picturehouse Central’, a 1,000-seat seven-screen cinema on Shaftesbury Avenue near
Piccadilly Circus in central London. In August 2016, Cineworld acquired six cinemas from
Empire Cinemas, including the
Empire Theatre in London's West End, and 4 other locations in Basildon, Poole, Bromley and Hemel Hempstead. Empire Newcastle was also acquired by Cineworld the following year. In November 2017, Cineworld began merger talks with the US cinema chain
Regal Cinemas. On 5 December, it was officially announced that Cineworld would buy Regal for US$3.6 billion (£2.7 billion), creating the world's second-largest cinema group. It would also allow Cineworld access to the US market, the largest in the world. The acquisition was completed in 2018. On 16 December 2019, Cineworld announced its proposed acquisition of
Cineplex Entertainment—Canada's largest cinema chain—for approximately US$2.1 billion. Cineworld planned to integrate its operations with Regal to achieve cost and revenue synergies and maintain the Cineplex branding for the Canadian operations. This would have made it North America's largest cinema chain. The deal was approved by shareholders in February 2020. However, Cineworld would terminate the purchase agreement due to alleged "material adverse effect and breaches" by Cineplex. The company subsequently sued Cineworld over the aborted purchase. In December 2021, the
Ontario Superior Court of Justice ordered Cineworld to pay damages of C$1.23 billion for pulling out of the acquisition of Cineplex. This decision caused the Cineworld share price to fall by nearly 30% overnight on the
London Stock Exchange. Cineworld said it would appeal the decision. Some 800 staff at Cineworld Group PLC wrote to chief executive Moshe Greidinger requesting their jobs back after many were made redundant "with immediate effect". Employees with over three years of service were told they would be retained with 40% of their salary or average pay. The letter said the move would leave many of the affected unable to afford essentials such as housing and food. In late May 2020, Cineworld announced it planned to reopen all its UK cinemas in July. On 14 August 2020, it announced a new reopening schedule, in which their Welsh cinemas would open on 14 August, whereas their Irish, Scottish and Jersey screens would open on 26 August. Their English cinemas had been open since 31 July. In May 2020,
Alicja Kornasiewicz became chair, having been a non-executive director since May 2015. Cineworld said that its decision would affect 45,000 workers, 5,500 of them in the UK, and 20,000 in the US. Later that month, it hired
FTI Consulting,
Houlihan Lokey, and
AlixPartners to help refinance the company's $8 billion debt. Greidinger said that Cineworld would reopen the cinemas once there was a "solid lineup of releases" ahead. He also said that its Central European operations would remain active on a case-by-case basis, as they have a stronger dependency on domestic productions than Hollywood productions.
Bankruptcy The release of
No Time to Die in October 2021 took Cineworld's monthly revenues in the UK and Ireland up to 127% of October 2019's levels. In December, Cineworld's 2021 global revenue reached 88% of 2019's yearly intake. Cineworld credited this to the success of
Spider-Man: No Way Home, the only film to have made more than $1.5 billion globally since the pandemic began. That August, the
Wall Street Journal reported that Cineworld was considering filing insolvency proceedings in the UK after struggling to rebuild attendance and incurring debts of more than $4.8 billion (£4 billion) following the pandemic. On 7 September 2022, Cineworld filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy. In April 2023, Cineworld's stock price plummeted by 30% due to their plan to discontinue the sale of their business in the UK, US, and Ireland. This decision was made because of the company's inability to find a buyer. Cineworld said it was also open to offers for the purchase of its business in regions other than the aforementioned areas. It announced that it plans to secure funding of $2.26 billion and that it had entered into an agreement with its creditors to restructure its debt and come up with strategies to exit bankruptcy. In July 2023, Cineworld announced that its chief executive,
Mooky Greidinger, would be stepping down. The company's lenders appointed Eduardo Acuna, an executive at
Cinépolis, to take his place. On 31 July 2023, Cineworld entered administration in the UK. That same day, Cineworld emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy after slashing billions of dollars in debt and the much-needed boost from the
Barbenheimer box office success.
Post-bankruptcy In July 2024, Cineworld announced it would close six of its cinemas across the UK as part of a restructuring plan to bring the company back into profitability. These included
Glasgow Parkhead,
Bedford,
Hinckley,
Loughborough,
Yate and
Swindon Regent Circus. In October 2024, Cineworld would drop out of opening a cinema planned in
Colchester as part of the same restructuring. In December 2024, the company confirmed that it had secured a $1.9 billion debt facility and had adopted the name Regal Cineworld Group. In December 2024, Cineworld also announced that it would close another six cinemas. These included
Castleford,
Leigh,
Northampton,
Middlesbrough,
Poole and
Weymouth. In May 2025,
Omniplex Cinemas acquired Cineworld's Glasgow Renfew Street cinema and decided to evict Cineworld from the building. ==Cinemas==